Recommended Practice based on International Guidelines
The head of the civil registration agency (often called the national registrar or registrar general) should be clearly set out in the law and should have sufficient power and authority to ensure that the civil registration system functions efficiently and effectively. These powers and responsibilities should include oversight and implementation of the civil registration system; participation in drafting of rules, regulations and instructions to promote uniform practice; delegation of registration responsibilities and powers to other officials; management and inspection of registration offices; conducting quality assurance monitoring and addressing areas of concern; assessing degree of coverage and establishing boundaries for local offices; hiring, management, and training of personnel; management of physical resources and technology; resolution of incidents and appeals; promoting the registration requirements to the public; receiving and compiling data; exchanging information with other agencies; and safekeeping records and archives.
Ghana
Legal Analysis
The National Office of the Births and Deaths Registry is headed by a Registrar of Births and Deaths appointed by the President. Section 3 of the Registration of Births and Deaths Act sets out the broad powers of the Registrar, who is responsible for the day-to-day administration of the Registry and for maintaining national registers of births, deaths and fetal deaths. More specifically, the Registrar is responsible for receiving records from District Registrars, channeled through Regional Registrars; approving late birth and death registrations; signing birth certificates; providing guidelines for the registration of places of burial or other disposition of bodies; approving corrections of errors in the register of fetal deaths or deaths stemming from incorrect information in a coroner’s certificate; employing security protocols to ensure that Registry data is secured and accessed only by authorized persons; and sharing civil registration information with the Government Statistician. The Registrar and the District Registrars have the power to make corrections in any of the registers, and to share limited information from searches of registration and burial records.
Regulations are issued by the Minister responsible for local government rather than by the Registrar. The staff of the Births and Deaths Registry are appointed by the President rather than by the Registrar, but the Registrar is empowered, subject to the Minster’s approval, to issue an Instructions Manual to the staff on registration procedures. The Registrar also designates Registration Assistants for each zone in a district. The law is silent on the promotion of registration requirements to the public.
Law Source
Registration of Births and Deaths Act 2020
Sections 2, 3, 6, 8(3), 10(1), 17(9), 20, 27(3), 32(3), 36(9), 37(3) and (6), 38, 39